1976

Leica R3

Discovering New Worlds Together

The Leica R3 is Leica’s first electronic single-lens reflex camera. Developed together with Minolta and Copal, it offers a new, particularly quiet and compact shutter as well as a comfortable aperture-priority mode. It is the first camera on the market to come with two light metering techniques: Integral and selective. Leica R-lenses are available in focal lengths from 16 to 800 mm.

Walls of Change

The First Leica Gallery

Born from the idea of making Leica photography more accessible and inviting interested parties to be inspired, engage in dialogue, and escape the everyday, the first Leica Gallery is opened in Wetzlar in 1976, displaying photographs by Dr. Walter Boje. Today, 29 galleries around the globe are keeping this idea alive.

Black-and-white image, three men looking at pictures on a gallery wall
Dr. Walter Boje at the opening of his show, talking to visitors
Seagulls flying with motion blur
Seagulls, Walter Boje
© Walter Boje Erben
Black-and-white image, portrait of a family
The Farming Family, Walter Boje
© Walter Boje Erben

Gallery

Men in a Hammam in Istanbul with high ceilings and arches
Black-and-white image, back of the head of a man wearing a suit with his hair combed back
In a green field with yellow flowers, a Mexican is arrested while a helicopter flies in the background
Black-and-white image, people relaxing in hammocks at a pool
Black-and-white image, a pair of human feet and a pair of dog feet, next to them a small dog wearing a hat on a lead
I never wanted to imitate reality. Photography should abstract, go beyond reality, put it in a different context.
Ralph Gibson
© Ralph Gibson
Black-and-white self-portrait by Ralph Gibson

A Kiss on the World’s Stage

Two men in suits kiss with closed eyes – not intimacy but a political sign of solidarity. Barbar Klemm captures this staged moment between Honecker and Brezhnev, between the GDR and USSR, from a distance. In the background: No response. The photo would become an icon of political reportage. It would go on to enter the annals of pop culture as graffiti art (based on a close-up of the same moment) on a piece of the Berlin Wall.

Black-and-white image, two men in suits kiss with their eyes closed, a group of men in suits stands in a line behind them
The Fraternal Kiss 1979, Barbara Klemm
© Barbara Klemm
Famous graffiti painting of the “Fraternal Kiss” photo at the Eastside Gallery in Berlin
The Fraternal Kiss as a graffiti painting at the Eastside Gallery in Berlin
© ddrbildarchiv.de / Manfred Uhlenhut

Leica Oskar Barnack Award

Those Who See, Those Who Look Differently

In honor of his 100th birthday, the Leica Oskar Barnack Award (LOBA) came into being in 1979. This award, named after the pioneer of 35mm photography, is intended to help photographers with a distinct power of observation and unique perspective to gain greater prominence. The prerequisite for being nominated, which continues to apply to this day, is that the photographer’s work must address the relationship of mankind with its environment from a documentary or conceptualist perspective.

Black-and-white image of Greenpeace rubber dinghies besieging a nuclear waste freighter.
Greenpeace action against marine dumping of nuclear waste 1979, Floris Bergkamp

The Relationship Between Mankind and Its Environment


The first LOBA is awarded to Floris Bergkamp as part of the World Press Photo Contest in 1980. For his breathtaking black-and-white series, he takes a considerable risk by joining Greenpeace on a rubber dinghy as they carry out an audacious strike against marine dumping of nuclear waste in the Atlantic. With one hand, Bergkamp photographs the struggle with the freighter, which is defending itself in raging seas – in doing so, he lays bare the ongoing struggle for the prerogative of how we see the environment.

Black-and-white image of Greenpeace rubber dinghies besieging a nuclear waste freighter.
Greenpeace action against marine dumping of nuclear waste 1979, Floris Bergkamp
Black-and-white image of Greenpeace rubber dinghies besieging a nuclear waste freighter.
Greenpeace action against marine dumping of nuclear waste 1979, Floris Bergkamp
Black-and-white image of Greenpeace rubber dinghies besieging a nuclear waste freighter.
Greenpeace action against marine dumping of nuclear waste 1979, Floris Bergkamp
Black-and-white image of Floris Bergkamp receiving the Leica Oskar Barnack Award
Floris Bergkamp 1980

The first LOBA winner


The Dutchman Floris Bergkamp (left) receives the award as part of the World Press Photo Contest at the Tropenmuseum in Amsterdam on April 2nd, 1980.

Leica Oskar Barnack Award logo
Go further
Leica Time Travel Through a Century: 1976